What's Included

Only information about dividend attachments in September is listed.
The list includes both successful and unsuccessful attempts to take
people’s Alaska Permanent Fund Dividends (PFDs) to pay debts. It
contains information about the following:

dividends seized by writ of execution

unsuccessful attempts to seize the dividend by a writ of
execution

PFD assignments (in which a person voluntarily signs over his or
her PFD to the court)

It does not include assignments to other government
agencies, writs issued by the federal courts or attachments by the IRS
(taxes), CSSD (child support), the Commission on Postsecondary Education
(student loans), DHSS (public assistance overpayments and court-ordered
treatment reimbursements), or the Department of Labor (money owed under the
Employment Security Act).

Attachments Processed After
September

About 96% of PFD applications are processed by the PFD Division in time
to distribute the dividend in September. However, a few thousand
applications are usually still under review after September. As the PFD
Division completes its review of each application, it will mail individual
checks to qualified applicants. If any of these dividends have been
attached by the court, the money will be sent to the court instead of to
the applicant.

Information about attachments processed after September is available as
follows:

Writs of execution served by a process server: Contact the process
server.

Writs of execution served by the court (by certified mail): Contact
the court.

Unsuccessful Writs (Reason
"A" and Reason "B")

If the Amount Seized in column six is 0, it means the writ or assignment
was unsuccessful for the reason indicated by the code in column seven:

A means the identifying information the creditor
provided about the debtor did not match any applicant for this years
dividend. The PFD regulations require a three-point match between the
information dividend applicants provide and the information creditors
provide. Any three of the following four identifiers must match: the
debtors last name, first name, date of birth or social security number. See
15 AAC 23.213(d).

B means the creditors claim could not be satisfied for
another reason, but the PFD regulations on confidentiality prevent the PFD
Division from explaining exactly why the creditors claim was not satisfied.
(See 15 AAC 23.253 (b)(4).) The reason may be:

The applicant was not eligible for a dividend, or

The dividend was attached by a claim with a higher priority. See
Alaska Statute 43.23.065(c) and (b) for the priority of different types
of claims.

2013

The list is arranged in alphabetical order by debtor's last name. Only
information about dividend attachments in September 2013 is listed. (About
96% of the attachments were processed during this period.)

2012

The list is arranged in alphabetical order by debtor's last name. Only
information about dividend attachments in September 2012 is listed. (About
96% of the attachments were processed during this period.)

2011

The list is arranged in alphabetical order by debtor's last name. Only
information about dividend attachments in September 2011 is listed. (About
96% of the attachments were processed during this period.)

2010

The list is arranged in alphabetical order by debtor's last name. Only
information about dividend attachments in September 2010 is listed. (About
96% of the attachments were processed during this period.)